TheGreek
Well-known member
Many years ago, my uncle jimbo told me that deer make people stupid. I reckon he was right.
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Yeah that’s brutal. Imo you can’t tell the difference between a 5 year old and a 7 year old on the hoof with anything but detailed history with the buck such as trail cam photos.Got a call from a hunter today wanting to confirm the age of the buck he shot this year. The hunter has been on a large lease for 15 years and said he shot a 180” class whitetail. He said they aren’t supposed to shoot deer younger than 7, and the biologist told him it’s 4 based on tooth wear. He said if it’s younger than 6 there’s a good chance he is going to get kicked off the lease.
7 seems pretty steep threshold for whitetail but maybe that’s more common than I realize? Most folks I’ve talked to in those situations are aiming for 4 or 5+ year olds unless deemed “management buck.”
Talk about knocking the wind out of your sails. Geesh.
Anyway, made me think of this thread, don’t know if the guy has children or not but that’s a heck of an example to learn at a young age to see your dad get what would likely be a buck of a lifetime for 90?% of hunters only to lose hunting access because it wasn’t old enough.
That will get you kicked off of most highly managed “trophy” leases where I’m from, and they’ll be a line of people to take his spot. Not uncommon.Got a call from a hunter today wanting to confirm the age of the buck he shot this year. The hunter has been on a large lease for 15 years and said he shot a 180” class whitetail. He said they aren’t supposed to shoot deer younger than 7, and the biologist told him it’s 4 based on tooth wear. He said if it’s younger than 6 there’s a good chance he is going to get kicked off the lease.
7 seems pretty steep threshold for whitetail but maybe that’s more common than I realize? Most folks I’ve talked to in those situations are aiming for 4 or 5+ year olds unless deemed “management buck.”
Talk about knocking the wind out of your sails. Geesh.
Anyway, made me think of this thread, don’t know if the guy has children or not but that’s a heck of an example to learn at a young age to see your dad get what would likely be a buck of a lifetime for 90?% of hunters only to lose hunting access because it wasn’t old enough.
Where are you from? I’ve never heard of club rules so stringent.That will get you kicked off of most highly managed “trophy” leases where I’m from, and they’ll be a line of people to take his spot. Not uncommon.


I’m from South Texas, and I can assure you that most trophy leases down here will 100% kick you off for killing a 180” 4 year old. Down here most big places are managing for 6 year old plus deer, many are pushing that up to 7.Where are you from? I’ve never heard of club rules so stringent.
Some of the Mississippi River equity clubs will require a ten point to be a 150”+ or be 5 years old or older. But no one’s getting kicked out for not making it. Usually cost an additional buck on membership as penalty.
First offense, they would kick out a member in good standing? A penalty of some sort is understandable, but kicked out of the club for one offense is hard to believe, as mistakes will happen.I’m from South Texas, and I can assure you that most trophy leases down here will 100% kick you off for killing a 180” 4 year old. Down here most big places are managing for 6 year old plus deer, many are pushing that up to 7.
What size/age bucks do you normally shoot? One thru three years old is fairly easy to tell the difference. Now the difference between five and six is nearly impossible.I would sell my gear and quit deer hunting entirely if I had to try to guess how old a deer was before I shot it. That would take every ounce of fun out of it.
Kicked out, death penalty. On places like that the guys on them know what they signed up for; you can’t have a lease with older deer if one guy goes rogue and starts shooting young ones. All in $15-25k/year per spot is typical, and guys spending that amount of money want to kill big, mature deer. It’s a very different mind set than what I would assume the vast majority of HTer’s would consider enjoyable hunting.First offense, they would kick out a member in good standing? A penalty of some sort is understandable, but kicked out of the club for one offense is hard to believe, as mistakes will happen.
I hunted a 5500 acre property and worked shift work. I nearly had it to myself during the week. We all shared a main camp house and it was a great place for the kids to grow up. Some of my happiest times were spent on that property. I only left to develop a family farm that we put back into trees. And that’s a great situation, also.These deer leases generally sound pretty gross. I’m all about managing herds fur some quality animals, but I’d likely quit deer hunting before going that route. Even if it wasn’t so expensive, the thought of having to spend time with the other people that are on these leases sounds terrible. Plenty of fishing to do that sounds way better than sharing a lease.
I have no idea on age. It’s not something that really crosses my mind. I’ve shot a couple bucks that have dressed out north of 240 pounds, though.What size/age bucks do you normally shoot? One thru three years old is fairly easy to tell the difference. Now the difference between five and six is nearly impossible.
Genuinely curious how they are “on the hoof” aging these 7 and 8 year old deer.Kicked out, death penalty. On places like that the guys on them know what they signed up for; you can’t have a lease with older deer if one guy goes rogue and starts shooting young ones. All in $15-25k/year per spot is typical, and guys spending that amount of money want to kill big, mature deer. It’s a very different mind set than what I would assume the vast majority of HTer’s would consider enjoyable hunting.